Football | Europa League

Spanish duo snatch dramatic wins

Athletic Bilbao, conquerors of Manchester United in the previous round, continued their Europa League run by scoring three times in the last 20 minutes to win their quarterfinal first leg tie 4-2 at Schalke 04 on Thursday.

Atletico Madrid also snatched a late win in a Spain-Germany clash, beating Hanover 96 2-1 with a delightful late goal by Eduardo Salvio.

Dutch league leaders AZ Alkmaar beat Valencia 2-1 and Sporting Lisbon beat Metalist Kharkiv by the same score in the other quarterfinal ties.

Raul and Fernando Llorente both scored twice to leave Schalke and Athletic level at 2-2 before Oscar de Marcos and Iker Muniain netted in the last 10 minutes for Marcelo Bielsa's team.

Llorente scrambled Athletic ahead in the 20th minute after a mistake by Schalke goalkeeper Timo Hildebrand, only for former Real Madrid striker Raul to prod in Atsuto Uchida's cross two minutes later for the hosts.

Raul gave Schalke, third in the Bundesliga, a deserved lead with a spectacular volley from the edge of the area just before the hour and was close to a hat-trick when he chipped the ball just wide.

Instead, Llorente began Athletic's late rally when he headed in a corner at the near post in the 73rd minute to put La Liga's eleventh-placed team back on level terms.

Schalke suffered more goalkeeping woes as Mathias Schober, who replaced the injured Hildebrand at halftime for his first appearance in three years, failed to hold Markel Susaeta's cross, allowing De Marcos to score from close range.

Teenager Muniain fired in the fourth to complete another impressive win for the side led by former Argentina and Chile coach Marcelo Bielsa, which also won both legs against Manchester United.

FINGER-POINTING SIMEONE

Colombian striker Radamel Falcao, scorer of a record 17 Europa League goals last season for eventual champions Porto, headed Atletico ahead early in the tie.

In a niggly game with plenty of heavy challenges, Mame Diouf slid in Lars Stindl's cross from the right to put Hanover back on level terms seven minutes before halftime and the Germans began to look comfortable.

But Atletico re-took control after Brazilian midfielder Diego come on just after the hour and Argentine forward Salvio curled in the winner from the edge of the area in the 89th minute.

Diego nearly added a third with an acrobatic bicycle kick in stoppage time but was foiled by a brilliant stop by Ron-Robert Zieler.

Atletico coach Diego Simeone, dressed in his characteristic all-black outfit, was a lively figure on the touchline, celebrating their winner wildly and coming on to the pitch near the end during a shoving match between the players.

The former Argentina captain, whose team's fierce tackling and off-the-ball challenges are reminiscent of his playing style, also got involved in a finger-pointing exchange with a Hanover player.

Alkmaar were heavily indebted to Australian Brett Holman and Costa Rican goalkeeper Esteban Alvarado for their win over Valencia.

Holman volleyed Alkmaar ahead in first-half stoppage time, a brilliant effort as he sidefooted in from a corner at the far post.

Alvarado was finally beaten by Mehmet Topal's header six minutes from the re-start but, after surviving several narrow escapes. Maarten Martens fired in the winner for Alkmaar after Holman had pulled the ball back in the 79th minute.

Second-half goals from Marat Izmailov and Emiliano Insua put Sporting 2-0 ahead against Metalist but the complexion of the tie changed when Cleiton Xavier replied for the visitors with a penalty in stoppage time.